OOCClassy Way to finish a post Bones. I love it.There was always work to be done.
Marcus stood with a slow pant to his breath, his arms now stiffening from their earlier exertion. His sword was obviously not going to be getting any lighter, and so he slipped it back into it's sheath under his robe. One less burden for to worry about, in a sense. But things around here were far from over, and he knew things were only going to get rougher from here on out. Marcus had perhaps been a bit over-exaggerated with his display, but then again it had intended to be. He had hoped to get away without a fight, but as he now glanced over the trimmed field around him, it was apparent how that plan had gone.
A muffled voice reached Marcus' ears as his mind came back to him, escaping the stony prison he had erected around it. His eyes spent moments between each of the men, as his mind passively gazed over the results of his efforts. Dead men, with the look of drying blood and the smell of roasting flesh hanging viciously in the air. He felt no grief, no remorse, not even a semblance regret. Marcus thanked the gods he didn't feel any satisfaction, but deep down, he was happy about how things had ended up. And this thought above all filled him with dread.
At least he was still alive.
As his mind refocused on the world around him, Marcus concentrated and set to work, one last time. Quite happy to have a task that didn't involve killing more people, the young wizard quickly ran through all of the means to douse these flames. The roaring flames alongside the wall were growing with each moment, and there was no time to waste. Swiftly, Marcus let his eyes strain to look out among the field to find anything that may be of aid. Producing any more res could put him straight into over-giving territory, and he had heard stories of men who only wanted to cast more and more, until their bodies were dried husks of flesh and stone. No, he would make do with what he had, and soon the answer showed itself to him quite brightly.
It was what was right in front of him.
Caught up in the close-quarters fight, Marcus had forgotten about the pair of swords he had set across the field from him, held up only by the pure chance of Marcus' division of attention. A lot of good they had done, guarding Tock without a motion, and helping to light the blaze he was now fighting. A lesson to be had, for sure, but Marcus had no time for that. No time for anything but the job at hand. Now aware of the state of his mind, Marcus detached himself from the Split Stone, and concentrated on the blades hovering a few feet away from him. His head already throbbed from the exertion, but at the very least he was not expending any more djed.
After all, Marcus could handle fainting better than he could runaway magic.
The two blades of flame steadied once more in their hovering, before coming together in blob of licking fires. In Marcus' mind, all he envisioned was the small orb of res hanging at the center, holding the fire around it's surface by sheer will and attraction. Marcus carefully strode closer towards the more dangerous blaze, keeping his mind on the blob of fire-laden res that trailed his motions. Once he was close enough to manage the concentration, he fell to his knees and grit his teeth with the effort he knew was about to leave him. There's always a job to do, and Marcus knows one of them is going to suck.
The manipulated orb hovered beside the roaring flames, already drawing small spouts of orange into it's sphere of control. But it was not enough; it rarely was, with Marcus' luck. The wizard pushed the power further and further, his mind's eye blurring with the strain as more and more of the flames left the charred pile of logs. Beads of sweat dripped down Marcus' forehead as he knelt, watching the events unfold with devil's eyes, a gleaming emerald-green. Eyes that would kill in order to achieve a goal, and watch as a man laid dying. Marcus hated those eyes, and wished things were simpler; that life was just a daily occurrence filled with the mundane. A small grin washed across the man's face as the thought crossed his mind, giving him the push he needed to struggle on.
What a joke.
Steadily enough, the flames were moved over. Marcus would've cheered and celebrated, but if anything he should be stuttering in shame. He had just made a bigger ball of fire. The flames had not seemed much, but as Marcus glanced over to the pile of wood, a tricky task at a time like this, he saw stone-cold logs, blackened but without a single ember. He had pulled every piece of heat from the brigand's flames, and was left with a roaring orb of fire the height of a man. It held itself wavering in the air, the small amount of res barely maintaining its grip on the fire. Marcus took a shuffling step backwards in hesitation, when a crisping sound gave him an idea. An idea that was dangerous enough to pull him over the edge, but maintained a small glimmer of hope. It was a chance he would have to take.
Marcus crawled over to one of the thugs nearby, thankfully not noticing the bloody stump of where the man's hand
used to be. He picked up the man's dropped dagger, and grit his teeth as a small slice appeared on the flat of his thumb. Sacrifices, and all that. He made haste as he felt the orb slowly falling to the earth as his focus was shifted, but it did not take long. A trio of flower petals. Lines drawing through the middle of each, intersecting in the center. Concentric rings reaching out from the design, three in all. And all of this, written in Marcus' own blood, as he stood and he focused on the task at hand. Marcus couldn't help but chuckle at the pun as the thought crossed his mind, his bloody, glyph-covered palm pressed out towards the unstable ball of flame. Then things went just as he had hoped; simple.
A bellowing cry as a vicious spear of res left the wizards palm.
An explosion of steam as water erupted from the piercing spear and the inner core of the flames.
Small flickers of licking fire making their way to the ground as a mist of water falls atop them.
Darkness, and the sound of a body hitting the ground; one more to add to the count it would seem.
Marcus was quite comfortable on the ground. The ground demanded no action of him, and gave none in return. It was solid, and sturdy, and slow to act. And most of all, the ground was the best place to be right now, as Marcus felt the echoing reverberations in his head. Slowly he began to prod and test his body, examining where he stood in the scheme of things. Remarkably well as it turned out, his leg catching a small cut, perhaps from the blazed bandit's dropped axe from earlier? It was nothing of real consequence, and a bug-bite compared to the throbbing in his mind. Still, he considered himself pretty well off; he didn't feel the desire to start shooting fireballs in every direction, and he had only the slightest taste of metal in his mouth, a good sign given the night's events. All in all, Job well done.
And as Marcus warily made his way to his feet, he glanced out onto the dark field besides the Library and felt a disheartening feeling run down his spine. He knew immediately what it was, and knew he deserved it. He knew it was his burden to bear, despite the repression he'd deal with later. He knew a job was a job, and it was better to do a job than to live in fear of doing it, right? Still, it didn't make it any easier, yet his eyes could not stop.
He stared out into the grass, and felt the dead stare back.